He also alleged that Kardashian was on Quick Trim's payroll when she posted the tweet.

Sanford Siegal, the creator of the Cookie Diet, sued Kardashian, claiming she defamed him on Twitter.

According to Siegal, Kardashian tweeted in October 2009 that he was "falsely promoting" that she was on the cookie diet.

When asked if an album was in the works, Kardashian replied, "There's no album in the works or anything—just one song we did for Kourtney and Kim Take New York, and a video Hype Williams directed, half of the proceeds we're giving away to a cancer foundation, because The-Dream's and one of my parents passed away from cancer. Jim Farber, writing for the Daily News, called the song a "dead-brained piece of generic dance music, without a single distinguishing feature," and suggested that the single made Kardashian the "worst singer in the reality TV universe." As of November 2016, as per CBC Marketplace and interviews with celebrity endorsement experts, Kim Kardashian was paid between ,000 and 0,000 for each post that she posted on Instagram, Facebook and Twitter endorsing beauty products like waist trainers, teeth whiteners as well as Coca-Cola and well known charities.

Experts think that celebrities offer fake glimpses into their lives to make viewers fall for their advertising pitches, curated to look as though the viewer is catching them in a spontaneous moment when they are mostly staged.

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The lawsuit never went to trial but a settlement was reached by use of a mediator in 2012; the exact settlement is unknown.